Campbell v. Bank of Charleston
Campbell v. Bank of Charleston
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
It appears that John L. Erancis, at the time of his death, in 1865, was possessed of the shares referred to in the complaint, which stood on the books of the defendant in his name. He left a will, of which Charles R. Carrol qualified as executor, and as such executor, in 1866, endorsed in blank the certificates of said stock, with other stocks which he held in right of the testator, and delivered the same to his attorneys, Buist & Buist, who were to manage the business of the whole estate. In June, 1868, under a bill in which the said executor was plaintiff, and Grace Alston and others were defendants, the prayer of which does not appear in the brief with which we have been furnished, an order was passed directing the plaintiff to transfer and deliver to the Master the cash and certain enumerated securities in his hands. Amongst these, the stock of the Bank of Charleston was not named. The order concludes with the following words : “ And that thereupon he be discharged from all further accountability and liability whatsoever as executor of John L. Francis, deceased.” In June, 1869, Whaley, Mitchell & Clancy,'representing the residuary legatees of Francis, receipted to Buist & Buist for certificates for fifty old shares of Bank of Charleston, S. C., for fifty new shares of said bank, and for fifty shares of Charleston Insurance and Trust Company, all belonging to estate of John L. Francis. In October, 1869, the certificates of bank stock were brought to the bank by bona fide purchaser's, without notice of any defect or objection, to be transferred. The certificates bearing on their face that the shares “ were transferable only on the books of the said bank, by John L. Francis or
On the 18th day of March, 1870, on a petition in the equity suit already referred to, of Carroll, Executor, vs. Grace Alston and others, by this plaintiff and certain residuary legatees of John L. Francis, he, the said plaintiff, was appointed Receiver of the estate of the said testator. We have not been furnished with a copy of this order, and must therefore assume that it simply appointed him Receiver without reference to any particular fund, and without any conditions or limitations. The plaintiff by his complaint in the Court below demanded judgment against the defendant: “ First, for fifty whole shares and fifty half shares of capital stock of the said bank, to be issued in the name of John L. Francis, to the plaintiff, as Receiver of the estate of the said John L. Francis; or, second, for the sum of $7,500, the value of the said shares owned by the said John L. Francis, and the costs of the suit.” The Court instructed the jury “that the certificate of the Judge of Probate 'was illegal, and therefore void, and was no protection to the bank in the transfer of the stock ; that the Bank of Charleston had constructive notice of the illegality. That when the transfer was first applied for without the certificate of the Judge of Probate, and the bank requiring such a certificate before they would make the transfer, they were put upon their guard. That there was never any sale of stock by Carroll, the executor; that he had ceased to be the executor for more than twelve months when the order of the Judge of Pobate was obtained for the sale of the stock.” The jury were instructed to find a verdict for the plaintiff, which they accordingly did, in the sum of $1,500, besides costs. The exceptions by the defendant to the charge of the Judge constitute the grounds of appeal here. The argument on the part of the plaintiff resisting the motion to set aside the judgment, and for a new trial, proceeds upon the illegality of the transfer of the stock. That, therefore, no property passed. That he is to be considered, by his complaint, as simply asking that the bank be compelled to recognize him as owner thereof. This is not consistent with the nature of his complaint, which demands judgment for the fifty shares and fifty half shares to be delivered to him as
The illegality of the transfer by the bank is referred to the want of title in Carroll as executor at the time it was made, and this is claimed by virtue of the order of June 17th, 1868, “ discharging him from all further accountability and liability whatever as executor of John L. Francis, deceased.” Did this operate in effect as a revocation of his letters testamentary, or discharge Carroll from his office as executor? Doubtless the Court of Equity has the power to enjoin an executor from interfering with assets of his testator ; to appoint a receiver to take charge of the property of the estate where there is danger of its being lost or wasted ; confide this trust to more than one, and divide amongst several the discharge of the duties which appertain to an executor. But it never undertakes to discharge him from his office, for it is without power to a Dpoint his successor; and although it may regulate his action in regard to the estate, it never acts directly on the office. In Osborne et al. vs. Black et al., Sp. Eq., 435, Ch. Johnson, delivering the opinion of the Court, says, in relation to a discharge by an Ordinary, on the renouncement of an executor, “ Neither the Ordinary nor any other tribunal has any such power. The Courts of Equity do exercise the power of taking the assets out of the hands of any executor where they are in danger of being wasted, but it has no power to discharge him from liabilities incurred, or to deprive him of rights which he has acquired in the discharge of the duties of an executor.” The order referred to must have proceeded upon the ground that no assets, save those named in it, had ever come to his hands in the course of admininstration. No matter how comprehensive the words, or their purposes, as to a discharge of all farther accountability whatsoever as executor of Francis, the order never could be effective to shield him from a liability outside of the assets which he was by it directed to transfer to the Master of the Court. Was it to discharge him from the
It is ordered that the judgment be set aside, and a new trial granted.
Reference
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